Author:
Allen L,Engeman R,Krupa H
Abstract
Three methods of assessing relative abundance of wild canids were evaluated on a population of dingoes,
Canis lupus dingo (Corbett), on a cattle station in south-westem Queensland. The tested indices relied on
measurements of activity based on spoor. Two of the techniques attracted the target species to tracking
stations through the use of a novel (fatty acid scent) or food-based (buried meat) attractant. The third index
(activity) measured the number of dingo tracks crossing tracking stations placed at 1-km intervals along a
road transect.
All three indices had a high level of agreement for detecting differences in relative abundance, with
correlation coefficients exceeding 0.85. When the stations were analysed in 1-km segments, the activity
index proved the most sensitive, producing proportionally more positive responses than either of the other
two indices irrespective of whether the tracking stations were assessed at 1-, 2-, 3- or 4-day intervals.
Inconsistencies between indices existed, with the derived abundance indices not showing the anticipated
reduction following population reduction. The effect of season and the interaction between dingo activity
and index methodology are discussed.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
90 articles.
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